BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention.
[0001] This invention relates to systems for measuring blood flow velocity. In particular,
the present invention relates to an improved ultrasonic Doppler blood flow measurement
system for use during cardiopulmonary bypass and ventricular assist procedures.
2. Description of the Prior Art.
[0002] The measurement of liquid flow velocity using an ultrasonic Doppler technique has
been proposed for many years. Examples of Doppler flowmeter systems are shown in the
following patents: Tamura 3,741,014; Grandchamp 3,914,999; Hassler 3,974,692; Hansen
3,987,673; Fox 4,062,237; Stasz et al 4,122,713; McLeod et al 4,142,412; Stasz et
al 4,145,925; Fathauer 4,147,059; Papadofrangakis et al 4,257,278; Papadofrangakis
et al 4,265,126; Baumoel 4,333,353; Sainz et al 4,391,148; Herzl 4,391,149; Ryan 4
402 231; and Karplus et al 4,413,531.
[0003] One particularly advantageous application of Doppler flow measurement is in the measurement
of blood flow through a polymer conduit (i.e. external to the human body). Examples
of applications where blood flow measurement of this type is required include cardiopulmonary
bypass surgery and ventricular assist using blood pumps. An ultrasonic Doppler flow
measurement system is advantageous in these applications, because the sensor (an ultrasonic
transmitter transducer and an ultrasonic receiver transducer) are positioned on opposite
sides of the conduit and do not contact the blood. As a result, the sensor can be
reused without sterilization. Other flow measurement techniques, which require contact
with the blood, require that the portions of the sensor contacting the blood either
be sterilized after each use, or disposed and replaced.
[0004] An ultrasonic Doppler blood flow measurement system depends upon the presence of
particulates, such as red blood cells, air bubbles, and fat globules which act as
targets for reflection of the ultrasound from the transmitter transducer to the receiver
transducer. The velocity of these particulates will cause a signal frequency shift
due to the well known Doppler effect. The signal from the receiver transducer is typically
fed to a radio frequency (RF) receiver and amplitude modulation (AM) demodulator.
The demodulated signal is then filtered and amplified, and provided to a frequency-to-voltage
converter. The frequency of the signal is proportional to the blood flow velocity.
The output of the frequency-to-voltage converter is a voltage which is proportional
to blood flow velocity, and typically is used to drive or control an output device
such as an analog meter or display.
[0005] Despite the advantages of an ultrasonic Doppler system for blood flow measurement,
the ability to provide a quantitative and continuous measurement of blood flow with
such a system on a practical basis has proved extremely difficult. The challenge of
developing such a system comes from the wide variability of conditions under which
blood flow must be measured, and the fact that the operation of the Doppler flow measurement
technique depends upon the presence of particulates in the blood.
[0006] Red blood cells are poor reflectors of ultrasound and, as a result, an ultrasonic
Doppler flow measurement system requires very sensitive detector circuitry. Air bubbles,
however, produce approximately ten times the Doppler signal produced by red blood
cells. Fat globules also produce much larger Doppler signals than red cells.
[0007] In addition, the concentration of red blood cells in the blood affects the strength
of the ultrasound waves reflected to the receiver transducer. Because of the common
practice of diluting the patient's blood during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery, the
percentage of red blood cells will range from 15 to 40 percent. During ventricular
assist, on the other hand, the percentage of red blood cells may exceed 50 percent.
[0008] Oxygenators (artificial lungs) used during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery cause air
particulates to be injected into the circulated blood. "Bubble" oxygenators, so called
because gaseous oxygen is actually injected into the blood, cause a high level of
gas particulates. "Membrane" oxygenators, which separate gas and blood by a polymer
membrane, produce low levels of gas particulates. Fat particulates in the blood seem
to vary from patient to patient.
[0009] During ventricular assist, no oxygenator is used. The Doppler signal is the result
of reflection only from red blood cells (and whatever fat particulates are in the
patient's blood).
[0010] It is known from US-A-4 402 231 and US-A-4 413 531 to utilize automatic gain control
in the processing circuit of such doppler flow measurement systems. The problems involved
with AGC in such systems are described below.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The present invention is an improved ultrasonic Doppler blood flow measurement system
as defined in the accompanying Claim 1 and which accomodates extreme variation in
signal strength, variations in red blood cell concentration, and the presence (in
varying degrees) of gas bubbles and fat globbles in the blood.
[0012] In the system of the present invention, the Doppler signal from the receiver transducer
is demodulated and filtered and then provided to a clipping circuit which clips or
limits the incoming Doppler signal to a level similar to the level produced from red
blood cells. The clipped signal is then provided to an automatic gain control circuit
which accomodates the variations in signal strength which are due to variations in
red cell concentration.
[0013] The signal is then preferably provided to a frequency-to-voltage converter, which
produces a voltage signal which is representative of blood flow velocity.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] The Figure is a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of the ultrasonic Doppler
blood flow measurement system of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0015] In the embodiment shown in the Figure, ultrasonic flow sensing system 10 is an ultrasonic
Doppler effect system which provides an output representative of the flow of blood
12 through polymer conduit 13. System 10 includes a continuous wave generator 14 (which
preferably produces a signal at 2 MHz or 4 MHz), ultrasonic transmitter transducer
16, ultrasonic receiver transducer 18, amplifier/detector circuit 20, clipping circuit
22, automatic gain control circuit 24, frequency-to-voltage converter 26, and display
28.
[0016] Generator 14 drives transmitter transducer 16 to cause ultrasonic waves to be transmitted
through polymer conduit 13 into blood 12. The ultrasonic waves are reflected by particulates,
such as red blood cells, fat globules, and gas bubbles back to receiver transducer
18. As shown in the Figure, transmitter transducer 16 and receiver transducer 18 are
positioned on opposite sides of the conduit 13.
[0017] The signal from receiver transducer 18 is supplied to amplifier/detector circuit
20. In preferred embodiments, amplifier/detector circuit 20 includes an RF receiver,
an AM demodulator, and a band pass filter and amplifier circuit. The band pass filter
preferably includes a fifth order Butterworth high pass characteristic and a third
order Butterworth low pass characteristic.
[0018] The output of amplifier/detector circuit 20 is a Doppler signal having a frequency
which is proportional to flow rate (i.e. the velocity of blood 12 flowing through
conduit 13). The frequency f of Doppler signal is given by the following relationship:

; where v = velocity of blood, c = velocity of ultrasound in blood, ϑ = blood entry
angle of the ultrasound, and f
c = carrier frequency of the ultrasound.
[0019] As discussed previously, the problem with prior art ultrasonic blood flow measurement
systems has been the extreme variation in Doppler signal strength. This variation
results from a number of factors, including the difference in reflectance between
red blood cells, air bubbles, and fat globules; the different concentration of red
blood cells depending on the particular application (cardiopulmonary bypass surgery
versus ventricular assist); the different concentrations of gas bubbles depending
on the type of oxygenator used; and the variation in concentration of fat globules
from patient to patient.
[0020] With the present invention, this extreme variation in signal strength is accommodated
by the addition of automatic gain control circuit 24 and clipping circuit 22. Automatic
gain control (AGC) is a well known technique in many fields, and is widely used in
radio receivers.
[0021] It has been discovered, however, that the use of automatic gain control in a Doppler
blood flow measurement system creates problems and inaccuracies. In particular, when
fat globules or gas bubbles occur in bursts, followed by blood containing red blood
cells alone, the bursts cause the automatic gain control to reduce the gain of the
receiver so that the signals produced by the red blood cells which follow the bursts
will be missed until the automatic gain control recovers to its original red blood
cell gain level. This situation has been found to cause severe inaccuracies in the
blood flow readings.
[0022] As a result, the present invention combines clipping circuit 22 with automatic gain
control circuit 24. Clipping circuit 22 clips or limits the incoming Doppler signal
to a level which is similar to the level normally received from red blood cells. This
prevents automatic gain control circuit 24 from reducing the gain in the presence
of occasional gas bubbles or other non-red blood cell particulates. It has been found
that the combination of clipping circuit 22 and automatic gain control circuit 24
has overcome the prior limitations and shortcomings of ultrasonic blood flow measurement
systems, and has resulted in this system 10 which provides highly accurate blood flow
measurement.
[0023] The resulting Doppler signal, after clipping and automatic gain control amplification,
is provided to frequency-to-voltage converter 26. The output of converter 26 is a
voltage having a magnitude which is a function of blood velocity. The voltage output
is supplied to display 28, which in one embodiment is a bar graph display. The result
is a visual indication of the blood velocity through polymer conduit 13.
[0024] As shown in the Figure, the voltage output signal also is preferably provided to
a microcomputer (not shown). The voltage output is converted to a form which can be
used by the microcomputer, either by use of an analog-to-digital converter (not shown),
or by a voltage-to-frequency converter (not shown) which allows the microcomputer
to count signal pulses to produce a digital value representative of blood velocity.
[0025] In conclusion, the ultrasonic Doppler flow measurement system of the present invention
provides reliable sensing of blood flow velocity through a conduit which is usable
in a wide variety of different applications. Variations in signal strength due to
differing red blood cell concentration and the presence in differing quantities of
other particulates such as gas and fat are accommodated. The automatic gain control
circuit 24 accommodates variations in signal strength due to red blood cell concentration,
while clipping circuit 22 prevents inordinate reduction of gain by the automatic gain
control circuit 24 due to extremely large, occasional gas bubbles or fat globules.
[0026] Although the present invention has been described in reference to preferred embodiments,
workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form or detail
without departing from the scope of the invention as claimed.
1. Mit Ultraschall arbeitendes Strömungsmeßsystem (10) zur Messung der Geschwindigkeit
von Blutstrom durch eine Leitung (13), wobei das System (10) folgendes umfaßt:
eine Sendereinrichtung (16), die so angeordnet ist, daß sie einen Ultraschall in die
Leitung (13) schickt;
eine Empfängereinrichtung (18), die so positioniert ist, daß sie reflektierten Ultraschall
empfängt, um ein Empfängersignal zu erzeugen; und
eine Einrichtung (20), die aus dem Empfängersignal ein Doppler-Signal herleitet, dessen
Frequenz sich in Abhängigkeit von der Geschwindigkeit des durch die Leitung (13) strömenden
Blutes (12) ändert;
eine Begrenzungseinrichtung (22), die so angeordnet ist, daß sie das Doppler-Signal
auf einen vorbestimmten Pegel begrenzt;
eine automatische Verstärkungsregelungseinrichtung (24), die so angeordnet ist, daß
sie die Verstärkung des Doppler-Signals in Abhängigkeit von der Begrenzung des Doppler-Signals
durch die Begrenzungseinrichtung (22) regelt, um die Schwankungen in der Stärke des
Doppler-Signals aufgrund der Schwankungen in der Konzentration der roten Blutkörperchen
auszugleichen; und
eine Einrichtung (26), die so angeordnet ist, daß sie das durch die Begrenzungseinrichtung
(22) und die automatische Verstärkungsregelungseinrichtung (24) modifizierte Doppler-Signal
in ein Ausgangssignal umwandelt, welches die Geschwindigkeit des Blutstroms darstellt;
dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Begrenzungseinrichtung (22) das Doppler-Signal auf
den vorbestimmten Pegel begrenzt, um eine ungeordnete Verringerung der Verstärkung
des Doppler-Signals durch die automatische Verstärkungsregelungseinrichtung (24) aufgrund
des Vorhandenseins von Teilchen im Blut mit einer höheren Ultraschallreflexionsfähigkeit
als die roten Blutkörperchen zu verhindern.
2. System (10) nach Anspruch 1, ferner dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Begrenzungseinrichtung
(22) das Doppler-Signal auf einen vorbestimmten Pegel begrenzt, der im wesentlichen
vergleichbar ist mit einem Signalpegel des Doppler-Signals, wenn nur rote Blutkörperchen
einer bekannten Konzentration in dem durch die Leitung (13) strömenden Blut vorhanden
sind.
3. System (10) nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Umwandlungseinrichtung
(26) ein Frequenz-Spannungs-Wandler (26) ist.
1. Système de mesure de débit à ultrasons (10) pour mesurer la vitesse d'un écoulement
de sang dans un conduit (13), le système (10) comprenant :
des moyens d'émission (16) prévus pour introduire un ultrason dans le conduit (13)
;
des moyens de réception (18) placés de manière à recevoir l'ultrason réfléchi,
pour produire un signal de récepteur ; et
des moyens (20) pour engendrer, à partir du signal de récepteur, un signal Doppler
ayant une fréquence qui varie en fonction de la vitesse du sang (12) qui circule dans
le conduit (13) ;
des moyens de coupure (22) prévus pour limiter le signal Doppler à un niveau prédéterminé
;
des moyens de commande automatique de gain (24) prévus pour commander l'amplification
du signal Doppler, en fonction du signal Doppler limité par les moyens de coupure
(22), afin de compenser les variations d'intensité du signal Doppler dues aux variations
de concentration des globules rouges ; et
des moyens (26) prévus pour convertir le signal Doppler, modifié par les moyens
de coupure (22) et les moyens de commande automatique de gain (24), en un signal de
sortie représentatif de la vitesse d'écoulement du sang ;
dans lequel les moyens de coupure (22) limitent le signal Doppler au niveau prédéterminé
pour empêcher une réduction excessive d'amplification du signal Doppler par les moyens
de commande automatique de gain (24), due à la présence de particules dans le sang
qui ont une réflectivité des ultrasons plus élevée que celle des globules rouges.
2. Système (10) suivant la revendication 1, caractérisé en outre en ce que les moyens
de coupure (22) limitent le signal Doppler à un niveau prédéterminé essentiellement
comparable à un niveau de signal du signal Doppler lorsque seulement des globules
rouges à une concentration connue sont présents dans le sang passant dans le conduit
(13).
3. Système (10) suivant la revendication 1, dans lequel les moyens de conversion (26)
sont un convertisseur de fréquence en tension (26).